Conversations with Tyler - Matt Yglesias on Why the Population is Too Damn Low

Episode Date: September 9, 2020

Matt Yglesias joined Tyler for a wide-ranging conversation on his vision for a bigger, less politically polarized America outlined in his new book One Billion Americans: The Case for Thinking Bigger.... They discussed why it's easier to grow Tokyo than New York City, the governance issues of increasing urban populations, what Tyler got right about pro-immigration arguments, how to respond to declining fertility rates, why he'd be happy to see more people going to church (even though he's not religious), why liberals and conservatives should take marriage incentive programs more seriously, what larger families would mean for feminism, why people should read Robert Nozick, whether the YIMBY movement will be weakened by COVID-19, how New York City will bounce back, why he's long on Minneapolis, how to address constitutional ruptures, how to attract more competent people to state and local governments, what he's learned growing up in a family full of economists, his mother's wisdom about visual design and more. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links, or watch the full video. Recorded August 21st, 2020 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter  Follow Matt on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox. 

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Starting point is 00:00:00 Just a heads up that this episode of Conversations with Tyler does contain some strong language, so listener discretion is advised. Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems. Learn more at Mercatus.org. And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and upcoming dates, visit Conversationswith Tyler.com. Hello, everyone.
Starting point is 00:00:35 Today I'm here with Matt Eglacius. Matt needs no introduction, but I should tell you all, he has a new and excellent book out called One Billion Americans, the case for Thinking Bigger. Matt, welcome. Good to be here. How's it gone? Good. Now, I take it as a common theme in your work that you believe in increasing returns to scale, namely that the gains from interacting with other people typically outweigh the congestion costs of having them around. And that's certainly consistent with your earlier book, The Rent is Too Damn High. right? Yes, absolutely. Now, what views do you have that are inconsistent with a strong belief
Starting point is 00:01:11 in increasing returns to scale? You know, it's a little bit at tension with my personal preferences. People will sometimes say to me, you know, well, it's easy for you to say this stuff. You like live in this big city, you know, blah, blah, blah. But I happen to have grown up in Manhattan, you know, the densest place in the United States by far. I don't like it there that much. I've moved to smaller scale place. I like it better. Anytime I visit a small town, I kind of think, eh, I kind of like this. I'm not, I'm not, I'm not like personally that into like big crowds and huge things like that. I remember I went to, uh, to Hong Kong one time and I felt like I was, like the universe was having revenge on me for having done all these pro-density takes as I felt
Starting point is 00:01:59 like incredibly overwhelmed by these, these huge buildings everywhere. So like I genuinely do sympathize with the view that there's something nice about calm and quiet and things like that. And, you know, I mean, obviously everybody knows that. But I do think, you know, on an analytic level that you see tremendous rewards to sort of big scale things. I remember thinking I was working on this book at an early time and I was in Midtown Manhattan where, you know, even New Yorkers don't go because it's so terrible. And it's full of people, right? Like, I think full of people who would tell you nobody likes going to Midtown Manhattan. And there must be some reason for that. Now, obviously, we're all doing everything on Zoom right now,
Starting point is 00:02:45 and those kind of effects have gone away. But it's not like we didn't have telephones, you know, 18 months ago or no ability to do these kind of things remotely. People were drawn to each other for whatever reason. Let me put the question another way. In the book, you stress that American growth rates have been declining. You and I agree about that. But if there are increasing returns to scale at the national level, as the U.S. does have more people and more GDP, shouldn't growth rates be going up? Now, you might think, well, there's increasing returns within a city, but not within a country, but your arguments at the country level, and you even see a lot of cities dissolving or becoming smaller. You mention that also. St. Louis and Detroit are the more obvious examples,
Starting point is 00:03:27 but the U.S. as a whole, the population has become more dispersed. So doesn't that mean? mean, actually, there aren't increasing returns to scale? Oh, I see. Yeah. So, you know, I do think on some level, right, some of the deep structures of economic growth do have to do with our basic ability to exploit natural resources, right? I mean, I say in the book, it's like we're not all farmers here who, you know, need to worry about we're running out of wheat fields. But when you look at the sort of big, long-term trend, right, Industrial Revolution take off and kind of slow down in post-war years, that has to have something to do with the technology of energy exploitation on a pretty fundamental level. And, you know, that is an area where I don't think you've seen necessarily those same clear returns to scale. We've had, you know, some big advances in fracking, some promising advances in solar power, some other kinds of things like that. But, the kind of fundamentals of how we produce and use energy have driven a lot in the sort of macro picture.
Starting point is 00:04:35 And I think that news from the latter quarter, whatever it is of the 20th century, on that front was just sort of, you know, very disappointing, notwithstanding other things that might power growth forward. So would your recommendations be much more potent if paired with a better energy policy? and I don't hear me in a greener policy, though that's justified in its own right, but just command over much more energy, something like nuclear power that say Peter Thiel is proposed, would that make the increasing returns from a billion Americans much stronger? Yeah, I mean, I think if we had a burst of good luck, right, on the nuclear front, or maybe it's purely policy, I'm not that well versed in the nuclear universe and the arguments
Starting point is 00:05:20 that people have there. But I think it's definitely true that if we had a breakthrough there that could get us, you know, the kind of clean, abundant power that was hoped for in the original post-war nuclear years and that, you know, the microreactor people are very enthusiastic about. I mean, that would put us even more clearly in an increasing returns to scale world. Do you think that a belief in significant increasing returns to scale means that massive income inequality is simply inevitable, that even with high rates of taxation, the rates of growth of the increasing returns, at some point just overcome that. And the wealthy people are just
Starting point is 00:05:58 extremely wealthy and possibly politically very powerful. And you live in a Silicon Valley kind of world, whether you like it or not. You know, I don't know exactly where the lines curve on that. I mean, I'm impressed as I think, you know, a lot of people who are not hardcore anti-inquality folks that, you know, Sweden has a high number of billionaires per capital, despite a lot. of social democratic policies. And the reason for that fundamentally is that there are successful companies that were founded by Swedish people. And that that's good, right? If you're on the other side of it and you're trying to make the case for Sweden, you're trying to say universal health care is good. It's great that they have all these trains in Stockholm. You'd say, like,
Starting point is 00:06:41 look, this is a successful country, right? Like, it's high GDP per capita. They've got IKEA. They've got Spotify. But that's also why they have some of that very high end in a And, you know, can you like balance that out in some genie co-efficiency way? Maybe yes, maybe no. But I think even if you did, you wouldn't eliminate all of the political inequality that worries people, right? That you see, you know, this thing in California, right, where they're trying to regulate Uber and Lyft more strictly.
Starting point is 00:07:15 And so now the companies are saying, well, we're going to shut down there. And left-wing people are now mad at them. but if you run a significant business enterprise, like you're going to be a powerful person in society, whatever your personal income is, because it matters what these big businesses do. And I don't think that there's ever been a country that doesn't have that feature, right?
Starting point is 00:07:40 I mean, as long as you have big successful businesses, the people who run them are going to be more politically powerful than, I don't know, the man on the street. And that's just life. But it seems there is a difference between, say, Denmark and Sweden. So especially if you take away Maersk, Denmark doesn't have that many global companies. It's very socially democratic. Stockholm has a huge and pretty successful startup scene.
Starting point is 00:08:05 They're probably going to grow more billionaires or at least multi, multi-millionaires in the pretty near future. Would you in this regard rather be Sweden or rather be Denmark? I would rather be Sweden, too. I mean, I think it's fine if Denmark is Denmark. You know, one of the themes of this book, right, is it's about America, right? Like, this is not a book about all countries everywhere and what everyone should do. There's people, there's, like, anti-Semites troll me on my email all the time by saying, like, where's your support for diversity for Israel?
Starting point is 00:08:40 I get that, too. Yeah. So I'm not a super Zionist person, but I'm Jewish, secular. I have some critiques of Israeli policy. fundamentally to me, the idea of there being a Jewish state is not crazy, just like there's a Danish state and there's a Finnish state. And you've got to do things there. And it wouldn't be that if, you know, you had flood of immigration. Similarly, economically, Denmark's nice. You know, it's a nice place. If Danish people like it that way, I think that's fine. Good for them.
Starting point is 00:09:14 America, you know, is a big, diverse country whose strength, I think, has always had a lot to do with scale. And it doesn't make, it makes a lot of sense, I think, for us to see some positive lessons learned from Sweden in terms of ways you can be more humane and still be a dynamic, you know, we have big startups, things like that here. I think the idea of trying to turn the United States into a giant Denmark where it's like, people are reasonably affluent, but like there's no really big deal things happening here, like some guy who makes windmills. to me, that doesn't make sense, right? The United States is a, is a big place, right? It's been a big place for a long time. It's a diverse place. It's a place that cares about its power on the national
Starting point is 00:10:02 scale. And, you know, you're, I mean, I think to your inequality point, like, that means it's going to be a relatively unequal place compared to some other kinds of countries. In your book, you only cover the United States, but a lot of your arguments are pretty general. and I mean that in a good way. So why not say a billion people for the European Union? Now, you mentioned that America has a tradition of being diverse, but at some point it didn't have that tradition. Do you think that countries or regions that don't have the tradition of being diverse
Starting point is 00:10:36 can start being diverse and the EU, which is actually now pretty diverse, could take in a billion people? I think it would be interesting, right? You know, the EU has had a lot of problems. I think we've all heard. But, you know, in some level, if this project continues and they develop more of a European identity, like that would be a diverse identity, right?
Starting point is 00:11:00 If you look at their little Euro notes and they're trying to abstract away to like styles of bridges instead of national heroes, then that becomes a more accessible identity, right? I mean, conceivably it's easier for an immigrant to become, quote-unquote, European than to become specifically, Austrian in some way. And there could be a lot of benefits to that. I went to Ireland,
Starting point is 00:11:24 was the sort of last international trip I took. And it's a beautiful country, very successful in a lot of ways, but obviously a really empty country. You know, if you're working on a book about a billion Americans while going across from Dublin to Galway, like, I could not help but be struck by, like, it's like, where is everybody here? Like, couldn't we, couldn't we do more? And Dublin is this really exciting international city. You know, I went looking for, somebody told me there was like a good Indian restaurant somewhere. And then the staff there was like, oh, it's going to be very spicy. And I was like, no, no, no, it's okay. I'm not Irish. And I, but I saw, it was like there was an Amazon office near there. And they had their, you know, some foreign engineers looked like
Starting point is 00:12:10 from South Asia. And they were eating in there. And I thought, okay, that's good. That's okay. I can trust these guys. But it's not, it's not the tradition. you know, of Ireland. So it's a, it's a tougher political conversation. But I do think that's a society that you see changing to be more cosmopolitan and more diverse. And that will ultimately help power them through to the next level. Now, as you know, city sizes within a country are quite unevenly distributed. In your vision of the billion people, America, how large does New York City become? It's interesting. I think probably really, really big. It depends, obviously on their infrastructure issues. But, you know, the case of Japan, right, which is a big country,
Starting point is 00:12:53 but not nearly as big as current U.S., to say nothing, a billion people, U.S., that's a really big city, much bigger on a metro area basis than New York. And it keeps growing, even though Japan's overall population has stagnated or shrunk. And that's because they have a different land use regulation paradigm there that makes it much easier to keep adding houses to Tokyo. And You know, I read, I think I read in some book somewhere that, you know, in urban growth, you benefit agglomeration benefits with congestion costs, which makes sense, right? I mean, you could draw a good chart like that. But in Tokyo, it never seems to happen, right? There's like plenty of other places to go in Japan.
Starting point is 00:13:35 But they keep losing people, and Tokyo keeps adding them. And there's no spot at which, because they don't have the political constraint the New York or the Bay Area has. And there's no spot at which Japanese people. want to stop clustering in the greater Tokyo area. But say politically speaking, can you imagine a New York City running sufficiently well with 70 million people, which would be larger than most countries in the EU, right? That would be a pretty big country right there. So if we're a billion, is New York City 70 million and you still have city councils and a mayor
Starting point is 00:14:08 and there's just huge police force that could beat most armies? How does that work? No, yes. If we're talking about the political constraint, then obviously it's a much lower. bound than that. New York has a lot of governance problems. And, you know, they're going to take a short-term, I think, fiscal hit from the pandemic. But, you know, a question for any political entity is, like, how do you handle a short-term fiscal hit? Do you are able to ride it out and kind of rebound in a strong way? Or do you totally wind up running the car into the ditch? And I don't have, like,
Starting point is 00:14:45 incredible levels of confidence that New York's political authorities can avoid the run-into-the-ditch scenario. You know, I just think that in the abstract, the ability of an urban area to keep growing is bounded by governance issues rather than by the sort of fundamentals of space or congestion per se. But don't those governance issues mean we can't get to a billion? Because as we move toward a billion, the new arrivals, a lot of them will want to go to New York city, Los Angeles, Chicago, and they'll wreck those places, and then we'll stop. Is that not the equilibrium? Or is the equilibrium somehow New York and X's Connecticut, and a lot of it starts operating more like Northern Virginia, and it works pretty well, and it's all one big happy ending.
Starting point is 00:15:31 Or do we stop? Well, that's interesting. You know, I mean, I don't know that it's clearly true that population growth would pour into a place like New York. I mean, some people would, right? But we have seen incredibly dynamic growth in our Sunbelt metro areas, which are, you know, sort of unfashionable in various ways. But people are doing very well for themselves in Atlanta and Dallas and Houston and the smaller ones, Nashville, San Antonio, where I spend a lot of time for family reasons. They've become incredibly international just because America is a good place to live. Chicago, which has a lot of those sort of New Yorkie qualities that is much cheaper, you know, has been losing people, which is its own kind of governance type problems. But I feel like there's sort of plenty of
Starting point is 00:16:20 space for folks. You know, the interesting political constraint obviously is on immigration, right? I mean, I remember you wrote some time ago, I think in response to Brian Kaplan, that it's like, look, if you care about immigration and you care about people's ability to move, let's maybe chill with the like open borders talk, because if you, you're going to hit a hard political constraint and the country's going to lock down. And we've seen something like that dynamic in the United States. We've seen it in a lot of countries. And so managing people's level of tolerance for social and demographic change, particularly with foreigners coming in, you know, is an important political concept. That's where you need, I don't know what you would call it, wise political leadership and not just like strident, analytically correct, abstract people.
Starting point is 00:17:16 Let's talk about fertility for a bit. Is there a danger that the whole world or most of the world becomes like Japan where the population just keeps on shrinking and the world becomes a depopulated place? Is that on the horizon if we don't do what you're saying? I mean, I think that's a serious possibility, you know, and we can sort of, people can disagree as to exactly how dire is that. I mean, Japan continues to function, as Dean Baker would tell you. They're doing okay by some means. I think that's a sad outcome. I mean, in part for sort of vague Derek Parfit type reasons,
Starting point is 00:17:52 but also in terms of growth and dynamism, I think that, you know, it's important that people, you know, be able to have families. And I was struck. I mean, my thinking evolved a lot, when Lyman Stone and others pointed out that people were saying in America that they still wanted to have the classic 2.5 kids on average, and they just weren't. The number of children they were having was slipping to more like 1.8, more like 1.7 now. You know, and that's sad, right,
Starting point is 00:18:25 when people can't sort of achieve their aspirations. Of course, sometimes people's aspirations are wildly unrealistic or they're incompatible with each other or something like that. But I think we know that a world in which most people have two or three children instead of one or two children is like a perfectly plausible scenario. That's not like I wish I had a flying car, right? Like we can do it. Well, we have flying cars, so I think the flying car is more likely. But let's say we subsidized fertility with all of your proposals and we implement them perfectly. Won't it be the case that we're shifting the composition of the American population toward people who are much less educated?
Starting point is 00:19:06 Because the people who are very well educated, typically have higher incomes, the subsidies matter less for them, right? You could subsidize another birth for Mark Zuckerberg. It's not going to affect his calculus. But for less educated people, it's a bigger factor. So you'll make the U.S. on average, much less educated. And you'll make voters worse. No? Okay. So you're saying it's going to be like dysgenic to be supporting people. It doesn't have to be a genetic. Well, sure. Okay. Yes. It doesn't have to be genetic. It could be a pure cultural. inheritance. You know, that's interesting. I don't think it's a big issue necessarily. I don't think that
Starting point is 00:19:43 the gaps in numbers that we're talking about are all that enormous. I also think that a lot of the way society is structured disincentivizes educated professional people from having a second or third child, even though it's not that the objective financial cost of doing it is so high, but that it's like, you know, you think about like Democratic Party micro-targeting. everything. And they'll say, well, okay, you know, if this, if this little extra boost will help lift some people over the poverty line, like, we should do that. But if you're making $140,000 a year, you don't, quote, unquote, need, you know, help with your child care costs. That's how, you know, the people in the think tanks thing. But people care about the impact on their relative
Starting point is 00:20:29 standard of living of these things. And so I think a program that gives people, you know, child allowance type money or that organizes after-school activities for people in a plausible way, does have an impact, you know, not on Mark Zuckerberg, because obviously, you know, billionaires don't have a lot of limits on their consumption of things. But these kind of like, you know, middle class professionals who live in Northern Virginia, like they do, right? Even though they're comfortable, economically comfortable people, their consumption possibilities are still constrained in meaningful ways and how we structure incentives, what we subsidize, what we don't subsidize makes a difference to what people do. Now, I think people on average should become more
Starting point is 00:21:13 religious, in part because that would encourage fertility. Do you also think people should become more religious? Yeah, I mean, if I could be like full Straussian and, you know, kind of... You can be. It's not a radical. I don't really know how to do it, right? Like, if I put in my book. I think make people be more religious. I don't know how I would do that. Not make them, but just root for it. Yes, no, look. Talk up religion. If I, if you told me for mysterious reasons, church attendance is going to start going up back again over the next 30, 40 years, I would consider that to be a very optimistic forecast for America. I think, I think good secondary things would follow from that. I think, you know, community institutions,
Starting point is 00:22:03 are important, and in a practical sense, religious ones are what seems to really work for people. When I hear people say, oh, you know, this like new, like woke anti-racism on the left, that's like a new religion. I don't know that that's 100% accurate. I mean, I think there's something to that, and there's also ways in which it's not true. But if it was like really literally true, like this is a new religion where people are going to get together like once a week and they're going to know each other and they're going to have a higher value system that motivates them and they're going to like make connection. Like that would be really good.
Starting point is 00:22:40 Like religion, bad things have happened, you know, by religious people or under religious causes. But generally speaking, like it's good when just when people go to church. If you're rooting for a more religious America, does that mean in a sense you're rooting for a more right-wing America? Since those are correlated, right? causality may be tricky, but I suspect there is some. I think probably, I mean, I think probably we say that religiousness is almost constitutive of right-winginess, at least in some definitions.
Starting point is 00:23:13 So, yeah, I mean, I think a more traditionalist kind of America in some ways would be good. It seems that two parent families, or maybe three parent families, for that matter, have and support more children than do one parent family. So what should we do to encourage there being more two and three parent families? Yeah, that's a good one. I mean, you know, the book talks about sort of marriage disincentives in welfare state design because that's the sort of boring thing I'm into. And because it's also a real policy lever, right?
Starting point is 00:23:46 Like we could change how Medicaid eligibility rules work and how EITC phase in and phase outs work. You know, I think the Bush era stuff like marriage promotion, like if you could do that, Like if that really worked, like that would be amazing. Some people, you know, just like really kind of sneered at it. Like, this is absurd. You know, you're going to tell people to get married. It's like a totally good idea.
Starting point is 00:24:10 I just, I don't think that they came up with a program that like, you know, actually did this. But what's your program, right? Elizabeth Warren has a plan for everything. So you should have a plan for this. Yeah. So, you know, as I say, look, I think both liberal and conservative people should take marriage. incentive impacts on program design more seriously. Right.
Starting point is 00:24:32 So I think that liberals should admit that this is a real issue and that we should care about it and that you don't need to go like full Jerry Falwell to see that there's an advantage to encouraging people to form stable partnerships. I think conservatives should take their own like shit on this a little bit more seriously. And like, yeah, if we have to spend a little bit more money to make this work, like we should do it. right, the important building blocks of society, the important building blocks of free market capitalism don't hinge on the exact spending level on social welfare state programs, I guess, is what I would hope people on the right would appreciate. You know, what else can we do?
Starting point is 00:25:12 Public leadership, you know, probably matters. It's probably good for, you know, Barack Obama to talk about being a dad, right? That, like, that was nice. I think Donald Trump, Trump is a poor role model in social and personal life and that we should encourage sort of elite high-profile people to talk about commitment and marriage and why it's valuable, things like that. That's not like a program. I don't think we can make it legally mandatory for people to discuss the benefits of being an involved parent, but I think it's important. But there's so many subsidies and taxes in the book, why not have subsidies and taxes for essentially discouraging divorce and single-parent families? That's interesting. I don't know exactly how you would
Starting point is 00:26:03 discourage divorce in a kind of subsidy structure, but I'm open to it. That's not, I don't know. Do you have a white paper on that? There is a big literature on comparative divorce law, which I don't know well, but there are some systems across the states which discourage divorce. I'm not sure they're good for human happiness. If you just look at the parents, it seems especially women are worse off. But the more you wait, a higher number of people is a good thing. Obviously, you're confronted with the tradeoff. Yeah. And look, I think back when everybody was debating same-sex marriage, right? Andrew Sullivan, I think, you know, had a kind of a troll take where he was like, how come none of these people talking about the sanctity of marriage are talking about, you know,
Starting point is 00:26:48 revisiting no fault divorce? And I think that was like actually a good point, right? And, you know, it would be worth looking at. I don't know exactly what the literature on that says or where the threat of would be or what's even, you know, politically plausible. Obviously, if you tell people straight up, like, well, we're going to make you miserable, but it has some hazy long-term payoff that doesn't work in the political system. But I think that's a subject, you know, people should should think about. I think in so many areas of life, we'd look back on the 1970s and we say, you know, we maybe made some bad decisions back then. And I don't think we should completely exempt divorce and marriage law from that general critique. Do you think having more three-child
Starting point is 00:27:32 families would set back feminism? Don't think that it would. I think in the sense that, well, look, feminism means different things to different people. There's a version of feminism in the United States that is, well, I suppose other countries, too, that is extremely focused on the sort of super duper duper, duper high-end elites, right? And I think having larger families is probably bad for women's equality in the top, you know, 0.1% of achievement. if you look at the fact that there are many more male billionaires, right? That having any prospect of like leveling that is probably goes against sort of family things. On the other hand, if you're saying, okay, like the mainstream ways in which feminism impacts most people, right, is like women's legal and social entitlements to have jobs, to be financially independent,
Starting point is 00:28:34 to be able to get out of really bad marital situations, that kind of thing, you know, get school. The general changes we've seen over the decades where women are now on average better educated than men, where the income gap at the median level is starting to narrow. Like those kind of things, I don't think, are meaningfully impacted in a negative way by somewhat larger families. But my view is this, that for reasons that are probably intrinsic and biological, Women on average care more about the kids than the fathers do. The fathers are more likely to say, ah, let them go out and play.
Starting point is 00:29:11 It'll probably be fine. Women on average are more inclined to worry. That may be hard to change. So if there are more children in the life of the family, the preoccupations of women will shift more toward the children than will the preoccupations of the men. It doesn't have to be a bad thing, right? It's certainly good for the kids to have three of them. but it could harm what many people would consider to be feminism.
Starting point is 00:29:37 Right. I mean, on the other hand, I think we see that when we had larger families, there was less aggregate worrying. Right. I mean, that's part of how that went together. So I think it's a little bit of a, I think it's true that if you had exactly 2020 parenting norms, but with an additional child per family, that would have, you know, one set of impacts. I think shifting back to a slightly more relaxed standard might be healthier for everybody involved. You know, I'm going to try to avoid getting myself canceled with too much speculation as to what's inherent and what's sort of socio-cultural in terms of the gender difference in interest in parenting.
Starting point is 00:30:20 But, I mean, I do think it's true that, you know, a theme in the book is that we should be thinking about supporting the actual needs and preferences of women rather than the kind of hypothetical egalitarian sketch, right? And like we see that women have more desire to have children, that most women, like most men, are working class people who are like working for, they have jobs, right? Because like they need to pay the bills and things like that and are not necessarily hyper-obsessed with the glass ceiling. and who's leaning into what. And people want to have like nice, happy lives with a high standard of living where they can meet their aspirations.
Starting point is 00:31:07 And that is 100% in line with some strands of thinking of what's feminism and very much intention with some others. If I think of the well-governed countries in the world, it seems to me that most of them are pretty small. There's Denmark, there's Singapore, there's New Zealand. You know the list, right? And if I think of the very populous countries, I wouldn't quite call them a wreck, but they're much, much less well governed.
Starting point is 00:31:33 It's amazing in a sense the U.S. is not more corrupt and screwed up than it is. So if we move to a billion people, are we lowering the quality of governance in this country and by how much? I don't know. You know, I mean, that's an interesting question, right? I mean, I sometimes think, well, one reason that the governance standouts are small is that there's more variance in the small countries, right? because there's like a lot of them. So you go around and like there's a couple sort of really nice ones and there it is, which is different from a causal question, right?
Starting point is 00:32:06 Does scaling up make it make it worse? I think it's probably true though that, you know, a billion Americans will be more of a mess in the sense that, you know, people will scan the headlines of the latest in politics. Like, oh my God, you know, like, what a catastrophe. Because it's people who don't know each other, people who don't have anything in common. Politicians opportunistically are like trying to create weird new identity cleavages to mobilize people. And it's all very ugly and like everybody hates politics.
Starting point is 00:32:41 And now all the politicians are unpopular. And, you know, we would only kind of go more in that direction. Whereas if you have a homogenous small town, people who don't like it, you know, just leave. Right. And so you're left behind with a kind of a nice community. people who have a lot in common, who share a lot, who can directly self-monitor each other, who could be really well-informed about whether the guy in charge of the fire department knows what he's doing. Probably the right solution is something to do with federalism,
Starting point is 00:33:11 but it's definitely a different book as to why American federalism does not deliver on its promise in the way that we might think it should. If I think of myself, when I analyze, say, Denmark or Singapore, I'm less libertarian than when I analyze, analyze America because I think their governments have a higher chance of succeeding at what they might set out to do. So this Matt Eglacius, one billion Americans world of the future, will that future, Matt Eglacius, be more libertarian, just like I'm less libertarian when I analyze Denmark? I think in terms of direct public provision of things, right, is one way in which some of the small countries really suggest non-libertarian solutions to problems that I don't think
Starting point is 00:33:56 is appropriate for America or would be for the future. My mind was always blown by, I was in Stockholm sometime, and I was like super confused by how their city bike share thing worked. And I just like went into the Tibana and I asked someone who worked there, you know, obviously in English, right? Like so in not domestic language, I was like, how does this public service that you are not responsible for in any way or work for? Like, how does it function?
Starting point is 00:34:22 And she explained it, like, really well to me in a foreign language for no good reason. for no good reason, right? There's like no, I'm sure they have strong unions there, right? There's no reason for her to provide high quality customer service. And no American transit agency employee would do that. And that's just nice, right? And like, that's not America, and it's not going to be America. And it's really not going to be one billion Americans, America. So I think that level of libertarianism in which we do not expect direct public provision of things to be all that high quality is very much baked into the cake and could become even more so. It's time for about of overrated versus underrated, are you game?
Starting point is 00:35:04 Sure. You had him for a class. Robert Nozick, overrated or underrated? Underrated. Why? I think most people do not pay attention to what the end of Anarchy State Utopia actually says or to some of his other books. But, you know, he's a really deep thinker. and particularly because so few academics are right of center.
Starting point is 00:35:30 It is really to people's benefit. I mean, this is probably not to the specific benefit of the conversations with Tyler audience. But like people should really try to engage these major works like his in a serious way, not with the like, I'm going to get my highlighter pen and debunk this guy. It was one of the great privileges of my life to be in a small seminar with him. and really learn from him. I have obviously not become a Nozic style deantological libertarian. Nor did he. Yes, well.
Starting point is 00:36:02 Another Harvard philosopher, Hillary Putnam. Hillary Putnam, I don't think is that widely rated at all, but I am definitely a Putnam fan. The pragmatic tradition in American philosophy is good. He taught the single best class I ever took in my life on philosophy of language. LeBron James, overrated or underrated. I think correctly rated. I think at this point, everyone with a brain sees LeBron for what he is and he's excellent. Gilbert Arenas.
Starting point is 00:36:35 You know, so he got in trouble for that gun thing, right? And the other guy in that conflict turned out to be like an actual... But I don't even remember his name. It was like an actual murderer. Who went to jail. Yes. So, I mean, Gilbert got a raw deal in that. He pioneered the long distance three, correct?
Starting point is 00:36:54 So maybe he's underrated. Now, you spent a number of weeks recently up in the state of Maine. Overrated or underrated? Underrated. It's a great state. What is it we don't know about Maine? You know, I think not a lot of people know about Maine off the coast. You know, Interior Maine and the North Maine woods are really cool and great in a very different way from coastal Maine.
Starting point is 00:37:16 A lot of people come up there for the sort of brief visit. They see the rocks. They eat a lobster. And they say, all right, this is okay. And then they come back. But there's a whole main container. multitudes, you know. You gotta get to Greenville, Milanoch it, see the, see the real weird shit up there.
Starting point is 00:37:31 What makes it weird? What makes it weird? Yeah. It's because, you know, America has a rural culture that is regional, you know, in a particular way, southern and Midwestern. And that kind of northern New England is just different in its own way. It's cut off, like, spatially from the rest of rural America. it's like tucked away in with Quebec.
Starting point is 00:37:59 There's like weird towns up there where everybody speaks French. And it's just like it's a different kind of place. And I'm like you, right? I'm just somebody who likes weird stuff and places not a lot of people go. Why is your father, Rafael Iglesias, so underrated as a novelist? That's a great question. Because not enough people have listened to you over the years, you know? But that's true about anything, right?
Starting point is 00:38:23 You know, so I think I am not a, I am not a, literary person on any level. But I think that a certain kind of social realist fiction writing has become unfashionable. And that, you know, applies to him and his books and also to my grandfather's books. When you revisit your earlier musical tastes, what is your perspective? So if I think of a group such as Rancid, you used to listen to them. I bought that CD. I thought it was pretty good. I listened for a while. But now I never go back to it. It just seems derivative. of the clash. I'm not opposed to their body of work, but it seems irrelevant. The music you used to like. Do you feel that way about it? The Arctic monkeys. Did they contribute anything of value?
Starting point is 00:39:08 Yeah, I mean, I think that is a great, you know, you think back on your life, right? And there's stuff that you listen to because, or I'll say for me, right? Like I think most people, I have a kind of a curve of new music adoption, right? Where there was just a time in my life when I was super into going to see bands. So I was always checking out new things. I was getting into new CDs and just new music that happened to come out in those kind of mid-aughts years loomed really, really large in my mind. Then as I become an old person, I stopped going to concerts, I stopped being as on top of new stuff. I have a much longer back catalog to go through. And a lot of that stuff that kind of, I don't even know what you call it, but like mid-aughts rock and roll kind of
Starting point is 00:39:55 stuff that, you know, white people in their 20s we're listening to, I don't think holds up that well and has not going to stand the test of time. So what in popular music has proven to be enduring for you? Enduring for me. Well, so Rancid is enduring for me. I will always stand up for Let's Go. What else? You know, so from the era that I was dismissing, metric is the band that I really like, that,
Starting point is 00:40:22 you know, I look forward to all their new stuff. I revisit their old stuff all the time. I don't know. I haven't thought that much about popular music. How would you redesign Twitter? How would I redesign Twitter? They have to make blocking tools, I think, much more prominent, right? It's really important on Twitter, I think, to be constantly editing your experience.
Starting point is 00:40:46 And they don't present it that way for I'm sure various reasons. But, like, one thing I always want to do is, like, sometimes you see. a post and like it's terrible. And you should be able to just like mass block like everybody who gave it a little heart. Because there's too much, I don't know, just like trolling. You know, like Twitter's great, honestly. Like it's an incredible way to be in touch with other people to have these kind of mechanisms. But so much of what people do on there is just sort of re-inscribe their affiliations. And to get value out of it, you need to try to like dial that down and really take control over what see. Today is, I think, August 21st, give or take. At this point, what do you think we are learning
Starting point is 00:41:30 from the NBA bubble about basketball, not about COVID testing? What are we learning about the NBA bubble? That is an excellent question. I think we're learning that there is stuff going on off the court that is impacting what we see on the court in like a more clear way than we necessarily knew. Like, the games have been more different. Like, the course. The course, quality of the defense has been lower. Something is off, right? And I think it stems from people's routines being disrupted. I mean, I don't think we know exactly what it is that's going on in there. But there's something more to the game than what's happening within the kind of four lines of the court. And what's your prediction about what kind of team or what kind of player
Starting point is 00:42:20 is favored by the bubble? That's a good question. hear this and be able to judge your prediction, just to be clear. I know. I just like, I really hesitate to make sports predictions. You know, I think it's like having incredible amounts of like self-confidence with your offense. I mean, we were talking about Gilbert Arenas and I we pioneered the really far, long range three. And there were all kinds of problems with him, right? But it was that kind of spirit of like, I, in fact, can hit this shot. So I'm going to go take it. You know, like knowing that, right, and being assertive, you know, I think has proven its value in the NBA over the past 10, 15 type years. And with what seems to me to be a slipping level of defensive focus inside the bubble, it's like even more just like pull the trigger.
Starting point is 00:43:08 Some urban and yimbi questions. Will there still be a YIMBY movement, say three years from now when coronavirus, we hope, is more or less gone? Yes, I think that there will be. But if you see a lot of the YIMBY movement is coming for the Bay Area, the impetus to build there might be much weaker, support from builders might be weaker. Rents could be, say, 15%, maybe 20% lower. Palantir is moving out of Palo Alto. Maybe COVID-19, in a sense, is the rent lowering mechanism. Not in a good way, but... Yeah, so I think you've seen in some ways the biggest YIMB political success is in Oregon rather than in the Bay Area. and the people who work on that there,
Starting point is 00:43:50 they all say to me that the fact that the prices are not as high as they are in the Bay Area is helpful to them, that it becomes more comprehensible to people, why new construction, new market rate construction, improves the market because it's not so mind-bogglingly out of reach for normal people. It's like, okay, this nice new house might just be better than the house that I'm in, and I could move into it.
Starting point is 00:44:15 So I have a kind of a case for new construction. So I think that unless we see cities unraveling, right, that having a somewhat of a decline in the incredible pressure on prices in the Bay Area, it could be constructive. Also, there's at least some chance that with fiscal problems afflicting cities that the kind of municipal budget stakeholders get more involved in the fact that, you know, a city like New York actually has the ability to increase and enhance its tax base. anytime they want to by making it easier to do market rate building. That constituency, even though there's a robust group of people who would like their salaries and their pensions to be paid, have not really been mobilized on behalf of that cause. And so we'll see, right? I mean, I don't want to go too into this like, you know, it's a crisis, but it's also an opportunity type paradigm. But places prove themselves when they are hit with problems, right? It forces
Starting point is 00:45:16 you to either try to address your issues in order to survive or get much, much worse. So I think we're going to see a bit of a turning point. Say 10 years from now, how do you think New York City will be different for having had COVID-19 as compared to a non-COVID trajectory? I think probably more of a reset to, you know, even more of a sort of youth-oriented non-family type place. I been sort of, you know, going back to New York sporadically for years. And I've been struck that it's become a lot more sort of family friendly than I remember it from growing up there. And I think there's a pretty good chance that COVID pushes it back toward more of that 90s equilibrium. If there is a mutual fund for each and every well-known American city, which one would you go long on?
Starting point is 00:46:11 Which one would I go long on? Relative to market opinion. Relative to market opinion. Huh, huh, huh. I mean, you know, the future for Austin is very bright, but I think market opinion already knows that. You know, maybe Nashville, maybe San Antonio, Minneapolis. I'm going to say Minneapolis, actually,
Starting point is 00:46:31 because right now people are getting very low on Minneapolis because of their sort of looting problems, but the fundamentals there are very strong. And where would you short? Where would I short? I think definitely. San Francisco, which is not just taking this kind of COVID hit, but I think had a real, New York, there's like a lot of different things happening in New York. There's a lot of different
Starting point is 00:46:57 foundations that economic cluster there, and there's a real proved and ability to lose certain things and gain other kinds of things. The attitude between people in San Francisco and the technology industry is like really toxic and poisonous in a way that, would give me serious pause about the city's future. You could actually imagine civic leaders there thinking that they welcome the departure of that entire ecosystem, which is really dangerous for them. I mean, it's true that there have been problems
Starting point is 00:47:29 associated with the growth of tech in San Francisco, but the number of people there, like serious, well-informed people who don't see that that's more of an asset than a penalty, it puts them at big risk. Now, I'm very much an outsider to Portland in Seattle, but just from my great distance, it strikes me as a public choice puzzle that the mayors seem to put up with so much nonsense in their cities. And you don't have to believe the most extreme right-wing conspiratorial view of this,
Starting point is 00:47:57 but I still don't understand what happens there happens. Can you explain that to me? It's very mysterious. I don't know either of those cities. Well, I think it must have something to do with the fact that those are the whitest of the major cities in America and that they don't have the, I saw a lot of people remarking on at the Democratic convention. They say, oh, you know, they put all these African American mayors up there instead of the activists who are yelling at the mayors. And I was thinking, well, yeah, of course.
Starting point is 00:48:30 Like, you put up responsible, accountable elected officials who, you know, have to manage the various considerations that are up there, not activists yelling in the streets. And I feel like Seattle and Portland don't have the kind of political institutions and political stakeholders who can say, no, like, this is not helping. Like, I agree that there's a problem here and I want to work on it, but the specific thing that you guys are doing right now in the streets is not in any way related to that. And it's just very white Democratic parties in those cities. And I don't think it is helpful to managing racial tensions. You wrote a well-known essay suggesting that American democracy is doomed.
Starting point is 00:49:16 Yeah, there's some tension there. Why tension? Well, with the idea that we should add more people and that the country's going to collapse. Well, all of that can happen, right? Yes. If you think American democracy is doomed, does that make you less interested in adding more people? Or a bit like, well, it will be rich here.
Starting point is 00:49:36 they're not going to create that many political problems anyway, since we won't have democracy. So you might as well crowd in some more people from other non-democracies and raise their standard of living. How does the whole picture fit together? Well, you know, so I want to say my forecast there was not that the United States of America will cease to be a democratically governed country in the long run, but that the United States is due for a constitutional rupture, right? I mean, we've seen in French history and a number of other countries, you know, over the years that, you know, they continue to be democracies or democracy is restored. But you have breaks in the system, right? You have a moment where there's a rewrite of things.
Starting point is 00:50:20 And even in the United States, of course, our famous moments in history now are the founding fathers kind of calling backsees on the Articles of Confederation or the country completely falling apart after Abraham Lincoln was elected. and you come out on the other side of it, and we now call those people like the heroes of our historical epic. And, you know, it's how you have a successful country over the long term, is that when things break down, you come out on the other side with something better rather than with something worse. And my main aspiration in writing that essay is to try to get people, American people,
Starting point is 00:50:57 to be a little less mad at each other and to have a little bit more recognition of the extent to which there are structural issues in our governance that is making it hard for us to proceed, and that it's not all, oh my God, what the hell is wrong with those people? Because, you know, if problems arise, if something goes badly wrong, I think we, you want to say what they did after the Articles of Confederation, which is like, we need to change the rules here. We need to change the system, not we need to kill our political opponents. But what's the most plausible scenario for that rupture? So the Civil War, we know how that went. The Constitution, Articles of Confederation, that's past history. What do you actually see happening? Not a prediction, but just the modally most plausible path. You know, I think the configuration would involve something like a very unpopular Republican administration being replaced with a very left-wing Democratic president who, for, the demographic balance reasons in Congress doesn't have majority support in the Senate, right, and who then faces a lot of pressure from his supporters to sort of govern in extra-constitutional ways.
Starting point is 00:52:14 And then conversely, a lot of elite actors in the business community in law enforcement, in the military, are very motivated to resist that president's factors. I think it's the kind of thing we've seen in Latin American presidential type systems, and that, you know, could happen here very plausibly. I mean, that's not Joe Biden, right? But the Democratic primary could have gone in different kinds of ways. Eight, 12 years in the future, you might have a different outcome in this sort of situation. Now, you and I both know Donald Trump is not favored to win, but he does, in fact, have some chance of winning, even with very high unemployment, serious problems with the pandemic, long history of being corrupt, other issues surrounding rhetoric.
Starting point is 00:52:56 I don't need to tell you. what is your best account of why Trump is still in the race? I mean, I think there's sort of two versions of it, right? I mean, one is that polarization has created a situation in which there's a lot of loyalty, right? If you are broadly speaking in agreement with the ideas of the Republican Party, you are now highly motivated and highly incentivized to back the leader, right? You can imagine like a different kind of political system where you would say, okay, we're going to get rid of this guy. We're going to put somebody else up who's going to stand for the same sort of general values but have a different approach. In America, you can't do that.
Starting point is 00:53:39 The other thing is that, you know, progressive politics in the United States is very, I don't want to say it's very unpopular because it was very unpopular. It wouldn't win anywhere or win ever. But the public has serious doubts about putting the left in power in places in ways that a lot of people I know are a little bit in denial about, even though the facts are like staring you right in the face. Like, why are the Republican governors in Maryland and Massachusetts and Vermont, right? Why is Andrew Cuomo so popular, even though people on the left complain about him constantly? And it's because, like, people don't want to put left-wing activists in charge of the country. Democrats, I think, will probably beat Trump because people don't think that's what electing Biden would accomplish. But, you know, it's out there.
Starting point is 00:54:33 And it's like, I think not a new fact in American politics, but an enduring truth. How should we attract more talent to state in local governments? And I mean this in a purely nonpartisan way. just smart or harder working people. Ooh, yeah, smarter, harder working people in state and local governments. You know, for local government, I think a lot of this probably has to do with cleaning up some of the muck. Like there's like too many different local government institutions.
Starting point is 00:55:02 People don't know who they are or who does what, things like that. And trying to get a sort of, Blennon said, better, fewer, but better, which I think you could accomplish a lot with in local governments in the United States. state government is interesting, right? We have a big problem where the media, like people who follow politics don't get at all emotionally or intellectually invested in like what's happening in Indiana, even though state government just carries an incredible amount of the load, right? All the first order service delivery is done there, but it's very, it's not just low prestige.
Starting point is 00:55:39 It's like almost people don't pay attention to it at all. Well, that is low prestige, yeah. Sure, yes. And, you know, so like what can we do about that? I don't know. I mean, I think David Schleiker says we should concentrate more power in governor's hands because people do know who the governor is and pay attention and bad governors tend to get replaced.
Starting point is 00:56:00 So that has some merits to it. I mean, I have, it gives me pause on some level. But I guess if I had to pick, that would be my solution, that you have to strengthen the decentralized institutions of American government by centralizing them. One question on monetary policy. Has the pandemic shown that a nominal GDP rule is unworkable? Because say real GDP falls by 10%, right, over some specified time frame. Then to stay on the nominal GDP path, you have to inflate by that much more.
Starting point is 00:56:37 That seems both not desirable and possible. politically impossible and that the rule will just break? What do you think? I think hitting a strict target might be unworkable, but it's also shown the value of the nominal GDP targeting framework because we are otherwise finding ourselves spending a lot of time quibbling about how to understand inflation adjustment in a strange period of trajectory, right? So it's like if college wants to charge you full tuition, but they're only giving you online courses. Like, I think probably the right thing to say about that is that that's massive inflation. But like, you just like, you really can't redo how the CPI works in real time and then hit a CPI target. I do think you
Starting point is 00:57:23 might have to say, faced with a big shock, like, all right, we're settling for less, something like that. But a lot of the apparatus of NGDP targeting, right, like that we should have a futures market, that we should be paying attention to what this is, that we should be trying to get the newspapers to talk about nominal GDP, I think has all been validated by this experience. And it all got very in vogue as a discussion topic because of the Great Recession, 2008-2009 crash. But that was a very, from a macroeconomic perspective, I think that was a very conventional kind of situation, whereas this pandemic is a little bit weird, but the strength of nominal targeting is that it can help you think about the demand side aspect of,
Starting point is 00:58:07 of real shocks in a clearer way. Last but not least is the Matt Euglesias production function. So as you know, many public intellectuals, they use economics as a base, and then that shapes how they comment on public policy. The way I've read a lot of your career is you've used analytic philosophy as your base, then later learned some economics. Is that something you did consciously? Do you agree with that characterization?
Starting point is 00:58:33 And why don't more people do that? You know, I definitely agree with that characterization. I think it is not a conscious plan of attack. I majored in philosophy for very naive reasons. Like, I enjoyed the intro class, and my TA was flattering and encouraged me to pursue it as a major. But I do think it's a good, to the extent that people want to be, like, writers about things, I think it's a pretty good training.
Starting point is 00:58:58 I mean, I did a panel discussion at American Philosophical Association one time with Andrew Sullivan and with another writer, and we were all, like, old philosophy majors. and we were talking about this. And it's a good, it's a good background because it's, it's like really about words and how they work and how to think about things and how to draw distinctions and how to parachute into conversations that you don't know anything about and still make some kind of useful contribution to them.
Starting point is 00:59:26 You can always like read a textbook about something else, learn something. And you would never want to make, you know, economics is obviously an important subject. and economists know a lot of good and useful things. But in academia, you are rewarded for, like, pushing the frontiers, right? For having, like, the edgiest idea out there. But you don't really want to base policy recommendations on something like that, right? Like, one promising line of research that some hotshots have two new papers on is not, like, what you want to bet the future on. So to talk about policy, I think you, like, want to know the basics.
Starting point is 01:00:04 The basics are relatively easy to learn. Do you think of yourself in some ways as a kind of successor to the 1960s, 1970s, Jewish New York intellectual scene, but now hyperpowered by the internet? I mean, is that also your tradition? I don't think so. I don't know. How are you different from that scene? You are from the West Village, right?
Starting point is 01:00:26 Yes, I'm from New York and I'm Jewish. And your father's are right. Yeah, I don't know that much about those guys, to be honest. So I'm not saying it's not true, but that's not something that I think about or situate myself with. What did you learn about yourself from your stint working as an actual manager? Oh, man. You know, it's so easy when you do your job to get mad at your managers and to then make the subsequent turn to like all these people have no fucking idea what they're doing. But it turns out like it is challenging to manage.
Starting point is 01:01:02 It involves real skills. I was, it stressed me out. I don't think I did a great job of it. And you get a good appreciation for the idea that even though it might be hard to measure or to see externally that there is real skill being deployed in middle management and that the sort of meta management skill, right, that must be, I mean, I didn't reach this level. But the managers who have to pick the other managers, they are doing something that must be, I think, really hard to even conceptualize, but must have incredible influence on the success of really big organizations. Now, blogging was very important for your career, it seems.
Starting point is 01:01:44 It helped you a lot. Why is it that blogging doesn't seem like it's coming back right now? If it was useful to you, useful to me, useful to many other people. Is it Facebook? Is it Twitter? Is it something else? Why not? Yeah, I mean, I think we blame Facebook and Twitter conventionally for it.
Starting point is 01:02:01 But I don't think that it's necessarily just about the technological modes. Part of why blogging was such an interesting moment was that it introduced a genuine disruption into the ecosystem, right? And that people who early on were not affiliated with important institutions are necessarily well known by kind of colonizing the open. and space, you know, became big deal in our own little sort of niches. So Twitter has had some of that impact, right? Like, they're smart, good people who've come to public attention through their ability to tweet, which is good, right? That's like a sort of strong thing. But I don't think if you brought blogging back, it wouldn't be blogging in that sense, right? Like, people would want to read the blogs of famous people or the blogs that had big brands behind them or like the New York Times would own blogging or something.
Starting point is 01:02:59 Whereas what was what was special about that blog moment in its first decade was the extent to which people who we didn't know were just kind of write stuff and become influential. What did you learn from Paul Joscow, the famous economist and also your uncle? I learned a lot of stuff from Paul. You know, I mean, you've learned specific things about certificate of need rules for hospitals. But we always, in my family, a lot of economists, he and his brother Andy and my grandfather, Jules, are all economists, PhD people. I was always interested in the subject, you know, like to ask questions at family discussions. And, you know, his real sort of specialty is in regulatory type issues. and, you know, I came to appreciate from things he said just exactly how complicated these questions are of like,
Starting point is 01:03:58 what should we do with utility type infrastructure with these regulated type industries that so many people I know, you know, fall back on very hazy, like big picture ideological things. like they heard something happened that was called deregulation and it was bad. And that's just like not true. Like, I mean, it's not true that it was bad. It's like, like, what is deregulation, right? It's like a harder question than I think most people appreciate. And that's something I definitely learned from him. Very last question.
Starting point is 01:04:31 What is the most important thing you learned from your mother? That's an important thing I learned from my mother is, well, like personally or intellectually? Combined. You know, so I am not a visual person, but she was. And she really helped me. I am always reminded by her emphasis on that and how much it actually matters, like, what things look like and how the visual design is. And that that's not a superficial question, that our communications with one another, not exclusively, I mean, we have podcasts, but so much of what we do like comes through our eyes, right? And that, like, that impacts the message in, like, a profound and real way.
Starting point is 01:05:17 And you shouldn't think of it as just a sort of a distorting feel. That that's actually what we're doing when we write something is we're creating images that other people look at. Matt Eglacius, thank you very much. And again, everyone, a big plug for Matt's new book. One billion Americans, the case for thinking bigger. And, of course, you can also find Matt on Twitter and in many other places. Matt, thank you. Thank you. You ask tough questions.
Starting point is 01:05:45 Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler. You can subscribe to the podcast in iTunes, Stitcher, or your favorite podcast app. And if you like this podcast, please consider rating it on iTunes and leaving a review. This helps other people find the show.

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